not in Primary anymore

pro-voice: list of demands and actions for abortion rights

This Saturday, March 21st, Provo ProVoice will host a rally at Memorial Park (800 East Center Street) in Provo at 12:15 PM in support of abortion access and reproductive rights in Utah and nationwide. The following is our list of demands for Utah Senators and representatives at both the state and federal level. You can find out more about our rally and RSVP on our event page: https://www.facebook.com/events/1572519496349177/

List of Demands for Utah Senators and Representatives

Support the Women’s Health Protection Act, which would stop the state-by-state erosion of constitutionally protected reproductive rights by prohibiting states from imposing unconstitutional restrictions on reproductive health care providers, interfere with women’s personal decision making, or block access to safe and legal abortion services. Utah state representatives and Senators should also introduce and pass similar legislation on the state level.

Expand Medicaid to help more people be able to afford quality contraception and reproductive health services.

Require that public schools include medically accurate information on contraception and consent in sex education classes as well as information about abstinence.

Provide state funding for STI prevention programs.

Allow both the parental consent and notification requirement for minors seeking abortions to be cleared by a court injunction determining that the minor is sufficiently mature to make their own decisions or that abortion would be in the minor’s best interest.

Allow private and public health insurance, including Medicaid, to include abortion coverage in their packages of benefits, no exceptions.

Remove targeted regulations for abortion providers (TRAP) that include 1) requiring abortion providers to be within 15 minutes of a hospital with transfer agreements and admitting privileges, making abortion for people in rural areas nearly impossible; 2) requiring ridiculous physical plant regulations, including specific requirements dictating various room sizes, the type of lighting used in storerooms, laundries, and hallways, the type of fabric used on window coverings, and the height of the ceiling in the boiler room.

Remove the 72-hour waiting period that makes abortion for low-income people and people living in rural areas nearly impossible.

Remove the requirement that physicians must offer to inject the pregnant person with anesthesia or analgesic to supposedly alleviate the fetus’s pain during the procedure, as fetuses are incapable of feeling pain before 24 weeks gestation.

Remove the requirement that state counseling convey the state’s preference for childbirth over abortion, introducing gross state interference into a private medical decision.

Listen to constituents who are willing to tell their stories about obtaining abortions and learn why people get abortions, how complex and difficult the situations can be, and why government should not be involved in making this choice for pregnant people.

Abortion Help Services

If you need a safe, non-judgmental space to talk about your abortion or unintended pregnancy, these three hotlines offer confidential, judgment-free emotional support, resources, and information from trained staff:

Exhale: 1-866-4-EXHALE / M-F 5-10pm PT, Sat-Sun 12-10pm PT (https://exhaleprovoice.org/) – After-abortion talkline for people who have abortions as well as their friends and family.

If you find yourself unable to pay for an abortion and need to raise money for it, be warned: GoFundMe deletes the accounts of people who use the service to crowdfund an abortion (while keeping up anti-abortion fundraisers). YouCaring (http://www.youcaring.com/) specializes in raising funds for medical procedures, doesn’t charge any fees, and doesn’t take down abortion fundraisers.

Check out the National Network of Abortion Funds (http://www.fundabortionnow.org/) to obtain funds if you are in need of an abortion and are unable to pay for it. Utah’s fund options aren’t great, but they may be able to help.

Actions to Support Reproductive Rights

Like and follow some of these organizations on social media to keep up on the latest reproductive rights news:

NARAL Pro-Choice America

RH Reality Check

Planned Parenthood Action

National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health

New Voices Cleveland

Students for Choice Utah

Faith Aloud

Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice

Catholics for Choice

Let people know you are pro-choice so that your friends know you are a safe person to discuss an unintended pregnancy with.

If you are interested in helping expand abortion and reproductive care access worldwide, these organizations do good work to provide safe, legal abortion, as well as other sexual and reproductive health care, to people in countries all over the world. Donate to help pregnant people worldwide have safe, legal, accessible reproductive care:

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16 Responses to “pro-voice: list of demands and actions for abortion rights”

Ironic. You complain about “gross state interference into a private medical decision” while at the same time demanding that the state pay for abortions by expanding Medicaid. I guess it’s not so much state interference you don’t like, just the interference you disagree with. Welcome to the dilemma of supporting big government.

What part of this post doesn’t jive with your definition of “Mormon”? The LDS church has no stance on legislation regarding abortion. I’m also honestly curious about what part of this post “sickens” you. It all seems pretty compassionate and reasonable to me.

It’s sad when people automatically assume that Mormon = Republican, or that Mormon = fundamental Christian. I think it’s wholly possible to be Mormon and progressive, and Mormon and pro-choice. People should understand that there’s even a spectrum within being pro-choice. What it really comes down to is reproductive rights and a woman’s personal bodily autonomy. Are we not allowed to have opinions and rights regarding that?

On a different note, I think it’s interesting that some people are more willing to comment negatively on more controversial posts such as this one, but completely ignore less controversial, but all-around positive posts like the “becoming a strong person” one. I think it really highlights why particular people look at this blog to begin with (and it’s definitely not to find/show support.)

Jesus said that it’s better to be drowned in the ocean than offend little ones. No, it’s not possible to be a true follower of Christ and his doctrine while defending the practice abortion, which is of course violence of children.

How come this post saids nothing about the father’s right? What if he wants to raise the baby? He doesn’t have a say if the woman gets an abortion. but if a father doesn’t want the baby and the mom does, he’s expected to man up, take responsibility, and provide child support. It’s a double standard.

I comment each time I especially enjoy a post on a site or I have something to contribute
to the conversation. It is triggered by the sincerness communicated in the article I read.

And on this article pro-voice: list of demands and actions for abortion rights | Young Mormon Feminists.

I was moved enough to drop a thought 😉 I actually do have some questions for you if it’s allright.
Is it only me or does it look as if like a few of these comments appear like
left by brain dead visitors? 😛 And, if you are posting at additional online
social sites, I would like to keep up with you. Would you list all of your community sites like your twitter feed, Facebook
page or linkedin profile?

On the topic of compassion. We’ve gotta have compassion for women who face the choice of abortion. But I think a higher law applies. The higher law says abortion is an assault on a totally defenseless population.

Abortion can’t undo an unwanted pregnancy or a pregnancy resulting from the ugliest kind of assault. There’s a better, more compassionate way forward for the women and for the children they might bear.